Spend A Day With Tirunesh Dibaba

Join our correspondent as he explores Dibaba's journey from her early running days to her current greatness.

Standing on Seventh Avenue in designer jeans and a white turtleneck in 25-degrees Fahrenheit the only thing that set this small (155cm) Ethiopian young lady aside from the other New Yorkers is the fact that she is not wearing a jacket. In fact, the group of girls standing next to her, oblivious to the Ethiopian's rock star status in the running world, look equally as thin and as athletic. Tirunesh Dibaba is what Michael Jordan was to men's basketball, and more. She has won the world cross-country championships three times, was the first person ever to win a 5000/10,000m double at the World Championships, and has broken world records to boot. The other women on the circuit fear 21-year-old "Tiru" like no other. Since her breakthrough in 2003 when the baby-faced assassin demolished all other juniors and then, a day later, took seventh place at the World Seniors Cross Country, she has been the lady to beat. Of course there have been a few pimples on the way, like "only" winning a bronze medal in the 2004 Olympics, a defeat that pains her to this day, but all in all, the woman who runs for the Mizuno Club on the international circuit has been an out and out winner.

Although this was Dibaba's first trip to the Millrose Games, for the inaugural New York Road Runners 3000 meters, she has graced the city in 2005 with her fast legs. Then, on a hot humid afternoon outdoors at Randall's Island, she ran 14:32:42 - the fastest women's 5000 ever run on American soil. Interestingly, earlier in that year she had run 14:32:93 to set an indoor record at the Reebok Boston Indoor Games - a record she broke on Saturday past with 14:27:42.

Rolling back the clock: A young Tiru to attend loved Bekoji Primary School, her favorite subject being the studies of Amharic, her mother tongue. Thus she was disappointed, when traveling to Addis Ababa at age 14 to continue her studying, that she missed the class registration by six days. She went to stay with her sister, Ejegayehu who is also a world class distance runner, and decided to start training. The two still live together in Addis, but the living conditions have been upgraded now. Bekelu Dibaba, a cousin, enrolled her in the Prison's Sports Club after Tiru proved herself finishing fifth in a trial race round a horse track. The systematic training soon paid off. Within a year she had ran at the World Junior Cross Country Championships, placing fifth. No eyebrows were raised; she was an African, wasn't she? Even back home in the village of Chefe, the result did not impress many. The cousin of Dibaba, on the father's side, and a neighbor at the town of Bekoji, had set high family standards winning the seniors, and a couple of Olympic gold medals. Derartu Tulu is a legend in Ethiopia; the great Kenenisa Bekele named her, not Gebrselassie, as being his inspiration. Imagine what heights Tiru set for herself growing up.

Fast forward to last Wednesday. Dibaba looks up at the sky and asks if the wind will die down. She has not trained this morning; she did not run yesterday either. It is beginning to bother her, she is worried her form will go and Friday's race will be ruined. She wants to run some light intervals. A slight irritation is seen in her face as she hates anything to come between her and the training time. Tomorrow, the day before the race, some easy jogging and a walk will be the only exercise, but today she needs to spin the legs and get that 60-second feel back into the muscles ... She knows Millrose is not a fast track, she has heard all about the famous Millrose Games; also that it is not a world record setting arena for distance runners. The 3000-meter record will not be attacked; perhaps it could be in Birmingham later on in February. That depends on the deal that Rich Kenah, her manager, can make. She also lets Rich decide what pace the pacer, Bridget Binney, will run on Friday. That detail is decided only the day before the race, giving hint that this is not going to be a fast performance; maybe it will only be an effort to break the Madison Square Garden record of Lynn Jennings, 8:40:95, set in 1990. Yes, that is possible, she says.

When back in Addis, the legendary coach Woldemeskel Kostre, who sets the sessions for the national team, is the man who plans Dibaba's workouts. A large group of Ethiopians will all train together - that is, if they wish to run for the national team. Ethiopian pride is extreme; all athletes long for a coveted team spot. A member of the squad, Meseret Defar, is Dibaba's greatest (and only?) rival. Rumor has it they are not the best of friends. When questioned, both insist to the contrary. Meseret usually chooses to train with a different group, but when the athletes are preparing for a world championship event, it is team rules. When in the company of both, in a confined small athletes' tent, neither congratulated the other after both had won their respective races; neither even talked to the other.

Oddly, they both run for the Mizuno Track Club, (Dibaba's own sister, Ejegayehu, runs for Adidas) but that is where the line ends. Meseret seems the only athlete who can challenge Tiru's supremacy to be called the number one women's distance runner on the planet. Defar it was who won the Olympic gold, Defar it was who was the sole athlete to knock Dibaba out of the Golden League jackpot race in the final event, costing Dibaba a huge chunk of change. Defar it was who beat Dibaba to win last summer's African Championships 5000 meters, and Defar it was who set the world 5000-meter record last year. But Tiru has staggering accomplishments herself that match each and every one of Defar's. What a shame a meet director could not have Defar lining up at Millrose.